There are two major research issues facing the industry now and
both of which are gaining traction in the Research sector as evidenced by the
attention they received at the recent ARF 7.0 Insights Conference.
One is how we define television with the question being, “Is it the
television set that forms the basis for the US TV Universe or are sets no
longer the best base on which to measure the ability to receive ‘television’ content?” The
other, a corollary to the definition of TV, is “What are the best cross-platform
measurement metrics to use for the media industry?” Are there certain
functionalities that work best for one platform that do not translate across
platforms or can we come to an agreement for a standardized cross platform
metric that captures all viewing and usage to give us a 360 degree total?
The recent ARF 7.0 conference in June offered an opportunity
to explore all of these issues in greater depth. In asking industry researchers
at the conference about the best cross-platform metrics, I found a range of
opinion from Nielsen’s Leslie Wood who said “It already exists. It’s advertising
response” to TRA’s Bill Harvey who said,”ROI is the key deciding factor” to
GroupM’s Lyle Schwartz who doesn’t think there is a singular metric for any
medium. While there could be baseline metrics across all media such as reach
and frequency, Lyle believes that there is an additional need to create
specialty metrics based on the specific attributes of the content platform.
Carat’s Billie Gold had another opinion. She said “there is
no definitive common metric to measure cross platform viewership since both
mediums are different in nature. However the Nielsen Online Campaign Ratings
product, used in conjunction with its existing television audience measurement
capabilities, is the closest we can get to true cross-platform measurement at
this time. It is not an exact comparison, but we’re definitely getting closer
towards an acceptable comparison.”
Jane Clarke from CIMM explained that there was interest in
the creation of a single source, scalable measurement system and perhaps a move
away from pure demographics to “targeted exposure metrics.” But there was also
the opinion of ESPN’s Glenn Enoch who said that a single source application may
not be possible and the solution may be to create a calibration hub where existing
datasets can be fused. And with second and third screens of various sizes, Richard
Zackon of the CRE posited that it may be necessary to take into account the
size of screens as part of the measurement criteria.
These are all valid and intriguing thoughts. Here is a short video on all of the responses collected at the ARF 7.0
conference:
In my opinion, the question of the perfect cross platform
metric may slowly evolve towards a standardized solution as connected TVs
filtrate through the population. Since these television sets can use IP for
program delivery, the measurement criteria for “traditional” television may
eventually evolve and coalesce into IP measurement. Until then, it will be interesting to see
some of the creative applications that are developed for cross platform total
measurement.
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